Transcript Document
The French Revolution
Chapter Seven
The French Revolution
Introduction
How would you define an unjust government?
What, if anything, would lead you to take part in a
violent revolution?
Why do most people dislike taxes?
Causes of the French Revolution
Influence of the Enlightenment and American
Revolution
Encourage overthrow of monarchy
Financial Problems
Deep debt caused bankruptcy
Unfair tax system
Causes of the French Revolution
Class Inequality
Special privileges of the 1st and 2nd Estates
Social Discontent
Corrupt and inefficient government
Poor harvests caused food shortages
Causes of the French Revolution
The Old Regime
The French people were
divided into three estates
(classes)
1st Estate-Clergy (1% of pop)
paid few taxes
Owned 10% of land
2nd Estate-Nobles (2% of pop)
Paid no taxes
Owned 20% of land
3rd Estate-Peasants (97%)
50% income tax
Urban workers, middle
class,etc.
How the Revolution started
King Louis XVI was a
weak leader – Called a
meeting of the Estates
General
Representatives from all
three estates
To change unfair tax
system
Fight over voting system
King Louis XVI and the Queen Marie Antoinette
How the Revolution started
Third Estate has little power in the Estates
General – always outvoted
Want a change in the government
More political power for the 3rd Estates
Third Estates delegates are locked out of the
meeting
Decide to meet across the street
How the Revolution started
Tennis Court Oath-set
up a constitution
Members of the Third
Estate formed the National
Assembly
Course of the Revolution
National Assembly
Establishes the Declaration of
the Rights of Man and Citizen
Liberty, equality, and fraternity
All people created and treated
equally
Seizes control of church lands
Sold church lands in order to
pay off national debt
How the Revolution started
Fall of the Bastille (July 14th, 1789)
Freeing of political prisoners
Jail seen by many as a symbol of tyranny
How the Revolution started
The Great Fear
Peasants begin to attack
members of the 1st and 2nd
Estates
October 1789 women of
Paris revolt over the rising
cost of bread
Force King Louis XVI to
leave Versailles and return to
Paris
Course of the Revolution
King Louis XVI Tries to Escape
Fearing for his life, the king tries to escape
Fails to leave France
He and the royal family are jailed (June 1791)
Course of the Revolution (cont)
The Legislative Assembly (Sept.1791)
Legislative Assembly replaced the National Assembly
King still held some executive power
The National Convention (1792)
Legislative Assembly came under the control of the
Jacobins
Radical faction that abolished the monarchy
Replaced the Legislative Assembly with the National
Convention
Course of the Revolution (cont.)
The National Convention (1792)
Reign of Terror (July 1793-1794)
Led by the Committee of Public
Safety
Chairman Maximilien Robespierre
In charge of suppressing ANY
opposition
The King, Queen, and other
“enemies” were executed
Over 40,000 people in total
Reign of Terror
“To punish the oppressors of humanity is
clemency; to forgive them is barbarity.” —
Maximilien Robespierre, 1794
the Guillotine
Execution of King Louis XVI
Execution of Maria Antoinette
The Rise of Napoleon
The Directory (1795-1799)
Extremely weak government
Controlled by five elected leaders
1799-The “coup d'etat”
Napoleon was named first consul of the Directory
A three-man Consulate replaced the Directory
1802-Named consul for life
France was under Napoleon’s control
Still pretended to be a constitutionally controlled gov’t
The Rise of Napoleon
1804-Napoleon named emperor
As Emperor –
Centralized the government
Created the Bank of France
Reinstated of Roman
Catholicism as the state religion
Established the Napoleonic
Code
The Governments of France during the
Revolution
Old Regime (?-1789)
National Assembly (1789-1791)
Legislative Assembly (1791-1792)
Convention (1792-1795)
Directory (1795-1799)
Consulate (1799-1800)
Emperor Napoleon (1800-1815)
Monarchy (1815-)
Napoleon
The Reign of Napoleon Bonaparte
Emperor Napoleon’s Successes
Defeated of Austrians at Marengo (1800)
Established French power on the continent
Napoleon's defeat of various European countries
(1805-10)
He installed relatives and loyalists as leaders
Holland
Several German Provinces
Italy
Naples
Spain
Sweden
The Reign of Napoleon Bonaparte
Emperor Napoleon’s Mistakes
The invasion of England
Battle at Trafalgar (1805)
The Peninsular War (1808)
Major defeat of Napoleon
Ended Napoleon’s plan to invade England
Instead, he tried the Continental System (blockade)
Also not successful
Fought against the Spanish (for five years)
Drained French military resources.
The invasion of Russia (1812)
Thousands of French troops died due to winter conditions
The tide started to turn in favor of the allies
The Reign of Napoleon Bonaparte
The End of Napoleon
By 1813 – All of the major European powers were
allied against France
1814 – In March Paris fell to Russia and Prussia
Napoleon went into exile on the Mediterranean
island of Elba.
1815 – He escaped and marched on the French
capital and took control of France for 100 days
The Battle of Waterloo
Ended his brief second reign
The British imprisoned him
Island of St Helena, where he died on 5/5/1821
The Congress of Vienna
The Congress of Vienna 1814-1815
What was it?
International conference that was called to
remake Europe after the downfall of Napoleon
Who were the important players?
Austria, Russia, Prussia, and Great Britain
Austria – Prince Klemens von Metternich
Russia – Emperor Alexander I
Prussia – Prince Karl August von Hardenberg
Great Britain –Lord Castlereagh & Duke Wellesley
Klemens von Metternich
Duke Wellesley
Alexander I
Karl August von Hardenberg
The Congress of Vienna
Prince Klemens von Metternich of Austria
developed a plan that was followed
Containment of France
Balance of Power
France lost power
Other nations (especially those around France) gained
tremendous power
France still strong, but no country could easily
overpower another
Legitimacy
Returning leaders who Napoleon ousted
The Congress of Vienna
What was the goal of the Congress?
Reestablish a balance of power in Europe
Establish peace between nations
Was it successful?
Highly successful - peace lasted almost 40 years
Established a German Empire
Germany in 1815
Formation of Alliances
Rulers were worried about other nations
Formed alliances
The Holy Alliance
Russia, Austria, and Prussia
The Concert of Europe
Russia, Austria, Prussia, and Great Britain
Set up to protect the status quo
Legacy of Chapter Seven
The French Revolution
Democracy in Europe
The Napoleonic Age
Nationalism spread throughout Europe
Seen as the best way to ensure equality and justice
Particularly in Italy and Germany
Colonies began to fight for independence
The Congress of Vienna
Time of Peace
No major international wars for decades